WolfmanWalt
WolfmanWalt
WolfmanWalt
Now playing

Wild Arms always holds a very special place in my heart. It was the first JRPG I played on my PS1 and the intro was the first time I really was like "Wow," when it comes to intros. Wild Arms 3 continued the trend and is still one of my favorite JRPGs ever. My memories specifically refer to the intro and outro. While

I was under the impression that Old Republic was free to play. Did that change?

Pretty much every first person shooter released in the past 5 years. There are exceptions, but not as many as I'd like.

This guy at my local hobby store conceal carries a desert eagle. Why? I have no clue. He just does. And it's not like he's a big beefy dude either. He's like 20 pounds soaking wet. So yea. SOMEONE out there uses one. Why? Again, I have no clue.

Forget adult women - I can tell you the only reason any of my coworkers have heard about Skyrim is because I've mentioned it around the office a few times. Except one guy. Because his son plays it. Aside from that though? Nada. If it isn't call of duty or some other first person shooter, it isn't to be cared about and

Technically speaking - it's still reactive force. He's reacting to the environment around him. I suppose the best way I can explain the difference would be for me to draw on experience from working in the prison that is as clear as the definitions make it. Reactionary force is when an officer is reacting to an

My childhood continues to die one piece at a time. I still have a closet full of old Gamepro magazines and even the old "Swat Pro" stuff they used to put out. Those were good times.

...and the furtive pigmy, so easily forgotten.

It was both. There were 3 specials and a TV series.

I'm honestly trying to take afew moments and trying to approach this differently. I'm trying to figure out how I would have approached the situation myself and really, I'm realizing that there's another aspect that I'm not familar with in terms of not knowing what sorts of resources the officers had at their disposal.

Really? If you wouldn't mind, could you cite the actual case on that as now I'm really curious about it, and when I say "cite the case", I mean the actual case, not just some quote on a website about it that could be just as made up as anything else. The actual judgment.

Generally the chart is pretty clear, but it can get messy. Also keep in mind: it's kinda hard for me to make general blanket comments on the subject as I don't know that department's specific policies. I can only comment directly on the policies my department uses and other department's I've encountered which have

No. I mean equal or one higher. Here. Let me present you with a situation that I don't think is too out of the ordinary. A police officer is making a routine stop on what appears to be a drunk driver. The driver pulls over after a moment and while the officer is preparing to get out of the car, the man gets out first

>do you know what is "proportional force"

Of which all other laws are derived from. "Supreme Law" is more figurative than not, because the constitution isn't actually a "law" per say. It is instead a framework for which the judicial system sets about the laws. This is why you can find a law to be unconstitutional, not because it's illegal, but because it goes

I was the same way with Sully in 2. I figure it's something they're gonna do given that they've established this as a franchise.

I was sold the moment her head popped off, starting chewing on her opponent, all while proclaiming, "Om nom nom nom nom nom."

Now playing

I can't find any full examples, but this is a clip of the ad I was talking about. And as much as I hate to use an ad called "ARMY COMMERCIAL LIES TO PARENTS," it's about the best I can pull out for the sake of conversation. You'd think Youtube in all of it's infinite glory would have one of these laying around.

Oh, I definitely think you're right in that the military uses modern popular culture to recruit. Those ads are definitely slanted towards that sort of thing, but I don't think that anyone really bases a decision on joining the military based on those ads. When I went through basic training, no one ever gave the reply